Intergenerational mobility of immigrants in 15 destination countries

Abstract

We estimate intergenerational mobility of immigrants and their children in fifteen receiving countries. We document large income gaps for first-generation immigrants that diminish in the second generation. Around half of the second-generation gap can be explained by differences in parental income, with the remainder due to differential rates of absolute mobility. The daughters of immigrants enjoy higher absolute mobility than daughters of locals in most destinations, while immigrant sons primarily enjoy this advantage in countries with long histories of immigration. Cross-country differences in absolute mobility are not driven by parental country-of-origin, but instead by destination labor markets and immigration policy.

Mathias Fjællegaard Jensen
Mathias Fjællegaard Jensen
Senior Research Fellow

Mathias Fjællegaard Jensen is a Senior Research Fellow at the Department of Economics, University of Oxford. His research agenda centers on inequalities in the labour market.